Will Hurd Wins Re-election to Texas Congressional Seat

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The majority-Hispanic congressional district represented by Will Hurd, a Republican, has been a hard-fought battleground for Democrats and Republicans in Texas. The seat has flipped five times since the early 1990s.CreditCreditDarren Abate/Associated Press

HOUSTON — The Democratic challenger trying to unseat Representative Will Hurd, a two-term Republican congressman in the Texas border region, conceded the race on Monday, ending a nearly two-week dispute over the counting of provisional and other ballots in a tight race and sealing Mr. Hurd’s re-election.

Mr. Hurd’s majority-Hispanic district has been a hard-fought battleground for Democrats and Republicans. The 23rd District spans a wide swath of Far West Texas, including parts of San Antonio and some smaller border towns. The seat has flipped five times between Republicans and Democrats since the early 1990s, and Democrats were eager to make it six.

As it turned out, the race was so close that it took days of ballot examinations to determine the outcome.

[Read: A look at races still not called in the Nov. 6 midterm elections.]

Mr. Hurd and his opponent, Gina Ortiz Jones, a former Air Force intelligence officer, finished the election with one of the tightest vote margins in the state. Mr. Hurd had received 49.2 percent of the vote and Ms. Jones got 48.6 percent, with 1,150 votes separating the two candidates, according to state elections officials.

Mr. Hurd had declared himself the winner, but Ms. Jones said the election was far from over and refused to concede.

Her campaign waited as an unknown number of ballots were tallied in more than two dozen counties and went to court seeking a two-day extension to get the job done. The postelection limbo paralleled, on a smaller scale, the vote-counting controversy unfolding in Arizona, Florida and Georgia. At the center of the Texas case was the counting of absentee, military and overseas ballots sent in by mail as well as provisional ballots, which are effectively temporary votes that are not yet official.

Ms. Jones and her campaign’s lawyers challenged vote-total changes and the handling of the provisional ballot process by elections administrators in Medina County and in San Antonio’s Bexar County.

In one moment that illustrated the lingering state of uncertainty over the election, Ms. Jones went to Washington last week and attended a freshman orientation for incoming members of the House of Representatives, even though she had not actually won election to Congress. She joined the freshman class for a group photo outside the Capitol.

But in a statement released Monday, Ms. Jones conceded the race to Mr. Hurd.

“While we came up short this time, we ran a race of which we can be proud,” she said. “I remain committed to serving my community and country, and I wish Will Hurd the courage to fight for TX-23 in the way in which our district deserves.”

The race opened a window on the increasing diversity of Texas politics. Mr. Hurd is the first black Republican to represent Texas in Congress. Ms. Jones was seeking to become the country’s first Filipina-American congresswoman and the state’s first openly gay or lesbian member of Congress.

The outcome was a belated boost to Texas Republicans.

While Republicans won many local, state and federal races in the midterm election and maintained their overall dominance of Texas politics, the state’s Democrats performed better than they had in decades, largely a result of a so-called “Beto effect” — the uptick in voter turnout and enthusiasm created by Representative Beto O’Rourke’s high-profile underdog campaign, ultimately unsuccessful, to unseat Senator Ted Cruz.

Texas Democrats flipped 16 state and federal seats to blue from red: 12 in the State House, two in the State Senate and two in Congress. In addition, some of the state’s most outspoken far-right politicians had surprisingly narrow victories, including Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who was the Texas chairman of President Trump’s campaign in 2016.

Mr. Hurd, a former Central Intelligence Agency officer who is one of the few African-American Republicans in Congress, is regarded as one of the more moderate members of the state’s Republican delegation. He has spoken against President Trump’s planned border wall and co-authored a bill earlier this year to both protect the undocumented young immigrants known as Dreamers from deportation and strengthen border security.

And he had a well-known tie to Mr. O’Rourke — an impromptu bipartisan road trip. In 2017, after visiting veterans’ service centers in San Antonio, the two congressmen from opposing parties decided to rent a car together and drive to Washington after a winter storm upended their flight plans, and they livestreamed their journey on Facebook.

“Beto suggested it,” Mr. Hurd told The New York Times at the time while on the road. “He thought I was going to say no.”

The 23rd District is one of the places where Democrats have accused Republican leaders of drawing boundary lines intended to weaken Latino voting power and of helping to squash Hispanic turnout by passing one of the country’s toughest voter ID laws.

In recent years, federal judges found in separate cases that the Republican-led Texas Legislature discriminated against minority voters in its drawing of the 23rd District and in its passage of the voter ID law. But in later rulings, federal courts sided with Texas and upheld both the district map and the state’s efforts to loosen the voter ID restrictions.

A version of this article appears in print on , Section A, Page 14 of the New York edition with the headline: In Late Call, G.O.P. Defies ‘Beto Effect’ In West Texas. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe